Part Four (Cont’d)
Mannheim Research Outpost, Vandor IV
Temporal Reset Number Unclear
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
And then, Natasha Kinsen woke up.
And then, as if to be completely certain, Natasha Kinsen woke up.
She looked across the room in confusion.
Because, at the same time that she was waking up three times in a row, she was also standing next to the table, idly taking a bite of double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings).
With some considerable effort, she swung her legs over the side of the bed and got up. While she was simultaneously waking up again, and looking at the version of her swinging her legs over the side of the bed and getting up with further confusion.
She felt her head beginning to swim. A wave of nausea threatened to overtake her. Somewhere outside the room, she heard what sounded like at least five distinct Klingon growls of frustration.
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
Except she didn’t. Because she was already out of bed, and standing up.
Or, at least, she thought she was.
With a great deal of effort, she managed to make her way over to the table, where a pristine double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings) was waiting for her.
The version of herself that had taken a bite out of it a few moments ago was now cartwheeling down the corridor outside, for some reason.
As she idly took a bite out of the cheeseburger, she felt herself waking up again. She resisted the urge to look back at the bed, where she was sure she could hear the sound of her feet hitting the floor as she stood up.
After all, she had some cartwheels to do.
She walked away from the table, leaving the bitten double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings) behind, even as she approached the table to take a bite from the untouched version of the same meal that was waiting for her.
As she reached the corridor, and the table, and she woke up, she found herself confronted by a distinctly confused Denella.
Or specifically, by four distinctly confused Denellas.
“What the hell?” the first one said. Followed by the second one. And then the third, and the fourth, as the question cascaded down the line of green-skinned women as they caught up with each other.
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
She also finished her sequence of cartwheels and raced on inside the living area. She also looked back at the collection of Denellas that were standing in the corridor and tried her best to answer her question.
“The Mannheim Effect,” she managed to say, several times.
“So, this is a good thing?” the Orion replied, and replied, and replied, and replied.
Klath came crashing out of his own room, roaring in frustration. He was followed by a second roaring Klath, with a third following close behind.
“Hey guys,” Sunek’s voices called out, “Check this out!”
Multiple Natashas, Denellas and Klaths turned around, to be confronted by the perplexing sight of a perfect circle of Suneks, all performing a dizzying Mexican wave.
The sight of that many Hawaiian shirts and synchronised arm movements caused a fresh wave of nausea to pass through Natasha. Even as she was waking up. And mid-cartwheel.
She tried to focus back on the multiple Denellas. Even as she felt herself take a bite out of a double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings).
“This is a good thing,” she said, several times, “I think.”
Before any of the Denellas could formulate a reply, several of the Klaths stepped in to bellow out a response instead.
“What is happening?” they growled, one by one.
Natasha glanced from Klath to Denella to Sunek to Klath to Denella to Sunek to Klath to Denella to Sunek.
She was at a loss for an answer. And none of what she was seeing was helping things.
It was the still-dancing collection of Vulcans that finally offered an answer, in a similarly unnerving cascading fashion to the Mexican wave they were still performing.
“Meltdown.”
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
****************************
“What have you done?!”
Berlinghoff Rasmussen asked the question shortly before Berlinghoff Rasmussen asked the same question.
It was an experience that both Berlinghoff Rasmussens found decidedly unsettling.
At the controls, two slightly out of sync versions of Dr Lester Brooks were staring aghast at the information in front of him. The screens were all dark, having long since shut down. The flood of temporal resets and time loops now being generated inside the experiment were far too much for the system to handle, and the live feed had dissolved in a burst of chaotic static.
The rest of the readings that were still somehow available were equally indecipherable. Even given the previously bemusing state of play inside the experiment itself, things now seemed to have left the realms of science altogether.
It was temporal reset number one and number one million, all at the same time.
No matter how many versions of himself might have been there, Brooks found himself regretting the decision he had just made. Once again, his father’s work was falling apart. He had lost control.
No, he thought to himself, not this time.
“I can stop this!” he called out, several times, as he raced over to the collection chamber for the chronitons, before racing over to the collection chamber for the chronitons.
All the while, Rasmussen and the other Rasmussens watched on helplessly, starting to feel like they were losing their mind.
“We need to shut down the collection,” Brooks continued, his words echoing around as multiple other versions of himself repeated himself, “Before the whole thing overloads and causes a—”
The alarm that suddenly began to blare out told him, and him, and him, that he (or they) was (or were) too late.
Meltdown.
On the other side of the lab, the Rasmussens all took a step back in sequence.
“Wh—What’s happening now?” they all echoed, “We need to get out of here!”
One by one, they turned and ran for the exit.
“No!”
“No!”
“No!”
Each version of Brooks called out in order. Each one consumed by despair as everything continued to unravel. Both metaphorically and literally.
In a final desperate attempt to rescue something from his work, and no longer thinking straight amidst the chaos all around them, the Brookses reached out for the metal collection cylinder built into the centre of the apparatus in front of them.
The one that was filled with chronitons.
The one that was about to implode.
As the first of the Rasmussens reached the door and dived desperately out of the lab, the first of the Brookses made contact with the cylinder.
Just as time itself was unleashed.
****************************
Jirel had been transported thousands of times over the course of his life. It was something that, while initially unsettling, you soon took for granted.
Except this time.
Because this time, Jirel felt himself coalesce as the transport completed. And then felt it happen again. And again. And again.
He looked down and was relieved to see he was in one piece. He was dressed in the black jumpsuit that had been replicated for him by Agent Taylor, complete with a sturdy belt and tether around his waist.
And then he felt himself look down again. Which felt weird.
He took a step forward, then turned back. And found himself looking at himself.
“Holy crap.”
As he said that, and even as he felt as though he was beaming in all over again, he glanced to his side and was surprised to find multiple versions of his father looking back at him.
His head began to spin. It was like he was stuck in the middle of some sort of hall of mirrors. Except each copy of himself or his father was slightly out of sync with the others. He recalled what his older self had warned them about. It was definitely getting trippy.
“Come on,” the furthest forward of the grey-haired men dressed in a similar jumpsuit to his own motioned, “We don’t have much time.”
None of the Jirels could bring themselves to ask whether that was supposed to be a pun.
As Jenner gave the order, he glanced at a Starfleet tricorder in his hand, checking which way they were supposed to be heading.
Even as Jirel felt the sensation of himself beaming in again, he tried to articulate what he was seeing, given that Jenner was acting far too calm to be seeing the same thing.
“But,” he managed, the words echoing around him, “Everything’s—”
“Yes, I know. But we need to block it out and focus. This way.”
With that, Jenner took off down the corridor of the research outpost, with a surprising amount of speed for his age. Seconds later, another Jenner followed in his wake. Then another, then another.
Still struggling to comprehend what he was seeing, Jirel took off after his father. Several times. He had to work hard to catch up with the leader of the pack of running Jenners.
“I suppose this is all just another day at the office for you Starfleet guys,” he panted as he reached his father’s shoulder, trying to block out the sound of the question echoing back over and over again behind him.
“Actually,” his father offered with a similarly unerring echo, “I usually just deal with the Tholians.”
Despite the disconcerting surroundings, and what he was here to do, Jirel relaxed slightly with his father’s candour. He looked down at the cylinder the older man was carrying.
“So this is why you beamed down with me? Didn’t trust me with that big bottle of antimatter?”
“Naturally,” his father replied as he checked the tricorder again, “Someone’s gotta be here to make sure you don’t screw everything up.”
There was the usual level of grouchiness in his tone, but there was something else there as well. A hint of something that Jirel was very reassured to hear.
A sense of camaraderie. They were definitely in this together.
“And besides,” his father continued as they jogged around an intersection, “I wanna make sure that we both make it back from this. This time around.”
Jirel nodded more solemnly, then felt himself nod again.
He blocked that out as best he could and focused on his father’s reassuring words. They were going to be able to do it this time. He was going to save the others. And save himself.
Both men rushed on down the corridor, each oblivious to how impossible that was going to be.
Mannheim Research Outpost, Vandor IV
Temporal Reset Number Unclear
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
And then, Natasha Kinsen woke up.
And then, as if to be completely certain, Natasha Kinsen woke up.
She looked across the room in confusion.
Because, at the same time that she was waking up three times in a row, she was also standing next to the table, idly taking a bite of double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings).
With some considerable effort, she swung her legs over the side of the bed and got up. While she was simultaneously waking up again, and looking at the version of her swinging her legs over the side of the bed and getting up with further confusion.
She felt her head beginning to swim. A wave of nausea threatened to overtake her. Somewhere outside the room, she heard what sounded like at least five distinct Klingon growls of frustration.
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
Except she didn’t. Because she was already out of bed, and standing up.
Or, at least, she thought she was.
With a great deal of effort, she managed to make her way over to the table, where a pristine double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings) was waiting for her.
The version of herself that had taken a bite out of it a few moments ago was now cartwheeling down the corridor outside, for some reason.
As she idly took a bite out of the cheeseburger, she felt herself waking up again. She resisted the urge to look back at the bed, where she was sure she could hear the sound of her feet hitting the floor as she stood up.
After all, she had some cartwheels to do.
She walked away from the table, leaving the bitten double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings) behind, even as she approached the table to take a bite from the untouched version of the same meal that was waiting for her.
As she reached the corridor, and the table, and she woke up, she found herself confronted by a distinctly confused Denella.
Or specifically, by four distinctly confused Denellas.
“What the hell?” the first one said. Followed by the second one. And then the third, and the fourth, as the question cascaded down the line of green-skinned women as they caught up with each other.
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
She also finished her sequence of cartwheels and raced on inside the living area. She also looked back at the collection of Denellas that were standing in the corridor and tried her best to answer her question.
“The Mannheim Effect,” she managed to say, several times.
“So, this is a good thing?” the Orion replied, and replied, and replied, and replied.
Klath came crashing out of his own room, roaring in frustration. He was followed by a second roaring Klath, with a third following close behind.
“Hey guys,” Sunek’s voices called out, “Check this out!”
Multiple Natashas, Denellas and Klaths turned around, to be confronted by the perplexing sight of a perfect circle of Suneks, all performing a dizzying Mexican wave.
The sight of that many Hawaiian shirts and synchronised arm movements caused a fresh wave of nausea to pass through Natasha. Even as she was waking up. And mid-cartwheel.
She tried to focus back on the multiple Denellas. Even as she felt herself take a bite out of a double cheeseburger (with all the trimmings).
“This is a good thing,” she said, several times, “I think.”
Before any of the Denellas could formulate a reply, several of the Klaths stepped in to bellow out a response instead.
“What is happening?” they growled, one by one.
Natasha glanced from Klath to Denella to Sunek to Klath to Denella to Sunek to Klath to Denella to Sunek.
She was at a loss for an answer. And none of what she was seeing was helping things.
It was the still-dancing collection of Vulcans that finally offered an answer, in a similarly unnerving cascading fashion to the Mexican wave they were still performing.
“Meltdown.”
Natasha Kinsen woke up.
****************************
“What have you done?!”
Berlinghoff Rasmussen asked the question shortly before Berlinghoff Rasmussen asked the same question.
It was an experience that both Berlinghoff Rasmussens found decidedly unsettling.
At the controls, two slightly out of sync versions of Dr Lester Brooks were staring aghast at the information in front of him. The screens were all dark, having long since shut down. The flood of temporal resets and time loops now being generated inside the experiment were far too much for the system to handle, and the live feed had dissolved in a burst of chaotic static.
The rest of the readings that were still somehow available were equally indecipherable. Even given the previously bemusing state of play inside the experiment itself, things now seemed to have left the realms of science altogether.
It was temporal reset number one and number one million, all at the same time.
No matter how many versions of himself might have been there, Brooks found himself regretting the decision he had just made. Once again, his father’s work was falling apart. He had lost control.
No, he thought to himself, not this time.
“I can stop this!” he called out, several times, as he raced over to the collection chamber for the chronitons, before racing over to the collection chamber for the chronitons.
All the while, Rasmussen and the other Rasmussens watched on helplessly, starting to feel like they were losing their mind.
“We need to shut down the collection,” Brooks continued, his words echoing around as multiple other versions of himself repeated himself, “Before the whole thing overloads and causes a—”
The alarm that suddenly began to blare out told him, and him, and him, that he (or they) was (or were) too late.
Meltdown.
On the other side of the lab, the Rasmussens all took a step back in sequence.
“Wh—What’s happening now?” they all echoed, “We need to get out of here!”
One by one, they turned and ran for the exit.
“No!”
“No!”
“No!”
Each version of Brooks called out in order. Each one consumed by despair as everything continued to unravel. Both metaphorically and literally.
In a final desperate attempt to rescue something from his work, and no longer thinking straight amidst the chaos all around them, the Brookses reached out for the metal collection cylinder built into the centre of the apparatus in front of them.
The one that was filled with chronitons.
The one that was about to implode.
As the first of the Rasmussens reached the door and dived desperately out of the lab, the first of the Brookses made contact with the cylinder.
Just as time itself was unleashed.
****************************
Jirel had been transported thousands of times over the course of his life. It was something that, while initially unsettling, you soon took for granted.
Except this time.
Because this time, Jirel felt himself coalesce as the transport completed. And then felt it happen again. And again. And again.
He looked down and was relieved to see he was in one piece. He was dressed in the black jumpsuit that had been replicated for him by Agent Taylor, complete with a sturdy belt and tether around his waist.
And then he felt himself look down again. Which felt weird.
He took a step forward, then turned back. And found himself looking at himself.
“Holy crap.”
As he said that, and even as he felt as though he was beaming in all over again, he glanced to his side and was surprised to find multiple versions of his father looking back at him.
His head began to spin. It was like he was stuck in the middle of some sort of hall of mirrors. Except each copy of himself or his father was slightly out of sync with the others. He recalled what his older self had warned them about. It was definitely getting trippy.
“Come on,” the furthest forward of the grey-haired men dressed in a similar jumpsuit to his own motioned, “We don’t have much time.”
None of the Jirels could bring themselves to ask whether that was supposed to be a pun.
As Jenner gave the order, he glanced at a Starfleet tricorder in his hand, checking which way they were supposed to be heading.
Even as Jirel felt the sensation of himself beaming in again, he tried to articulate what he was seeing, given that Jenner was acting far too calm to be seeing the same thing.
“But,” he managed, the words echoing around him, “Everything’s—”
“Yes, I know. But we need to block it out and focus. This way.”
With that, Jenner took off down the corridor of the research outpost, with a surprising amount of speed for his age. Seconds later, another Jenner followed in his wake. Then another, then another.
Still struggling to comprehend what he was seeing, Jirel took off after his father. Several times. He had to work hard to catch up with the leader of the pack of running Jenners.
“I suppose this is all just another day at the office for you Starfleet guys,” he panted as he reached his father’s shoulder, trying to block out the sound of the question echoing back over and over again behind him.
“Actually,” his father offered with a similarly unerring echo, “I usually just deal with the Tholians.”
Despite the disconcerting surroundings, and what he was here to do, Jirel relaxed slightly with his father’s candour. He looked down at the cylinder the older man was carrying.
“So this is why you beamed down with me? Didn’t trust me with that big bottle of antimatter?”
“Naturally,” his father replied as he checked the tricorder again, “Someone’s gotta be here to make sure you don’t screw everything up.”
There was the usual level of grouchiness in his tone, but there was something else there as well. A hint of something that Jirel was very reassured to hear.
A sense of camaraderie. They were definitely in this together.
“And besides,” his father continued as they jogged around an intersection, “I wanna make sure that we both make it back from this. This time around.”
Jirel nodded more solemnly, then felt himself nod again.
He blocked that out as best he could and focused on his father’s reassuring words. They were going to be able to do it this time. He was going to save the others. And save himself.
Both men rushed on down the corridor, each oblivious to how impossible that was going to be.